yes
Roman numerals were a system of writing numbers, not words.
The equivalent of 2013 in Roman numerals is MMXIII
M or m both represent a thousand in Roman numerals
90 in Roman numerals is XC.
1,000 in Roman numerals is M, the first letter of the Latin word mille (thousand)
Today the equivalent of 19 in Roman numerals are XIX But in ancient Rome they once were XVIIII or IXX In fact the Latin word for XVIIII is 'novemdecim' and the Latin word for IXX is 'undeviginti There is no equivalent Latin word for XIX
MIX
Type them
CCXXXI
A 5-letter word made up entirely of Roman numerals is "VIIII," which represents the number 9 in Roman numerals. In Roman numerals, "V" represents 5, and "I" represents 1. When "I" is placed after "V," it represents 4 (5-1=4), and when "I" is placed before "V," it represents 4 (5+1=6).
You can try improvising, use a line and put it over the roman numerals.
Yes, Roman numerals is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; a word made up of the adjective 'Roman' and the noun 'numerals' to form a noun with its own meaning. The adjective 'Roman' is a proper adjective and must be capitalized.